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Publication : Aberrant function and structure of retinal ribbon synapses in the absence of complexin 3 and complexin 4.

First Author  Reim K Year  2009
Journal  J Cell Sci Volume  122
Issue  Pt 9 Pages  1352-61
PubMed ID  19386896 Mgi Jnum  J:150490
Mgi Id  MGI:3850876 Doi  10.1242/jcs.045401
Citation  Reim K, et al. (2009) Aberrant function and structure of retinal ribbon synapses in the absence of complexin 3 and complexin 4. J Cell Sci 122(Pt 9):1352-61
abstractText  Complexins regulate the speed and Ca(2+) sensitivity of SNARE-mediated synaptic vesicle fusion at conventional synapses. Two of the vertebrate complexins, Cplx3 and Cplx4, are specifically localized to retinal ribbon synapses. To test whether Cplx3 and Cplx4 contribute to the highly efficient transmitter release at ribbon synapses, we studied retina function and structure in Cplx3 and Cplx4 single- and double-knockout mice. Electroretinographic recordings from single and double mutants revealed a cooperative perturbing effect of Cplx3 and Cplx4 deletion on the b-wave amplitude, whereas most other detected effects in both plexiform synaptic layers were additive. Light and electron microscopic analyses uncovered a disorganized outer plexiform layer in the retinae of mice lacking Cplx3 and Cplx4, with a significant proportion of photoreceptor terminals containing spherical free-floating ribbons. These structural and functional aberrations were accompanied by behavioural deficits indicative of a vision deficit. Our results show that Cplx3 and Cplx4 are essential regulators of transmitter release at retinal ribbon synapses. Their loss leads to aberrant adjustment and fine-tuning of transmitter release at the photoreceptor ribbon synapse, alterations in transmission at bipolar cell terminals, changes in the temporal structure of synaptic processing in the inner plexiform layer of the retina and perturbed vision.
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